Some business owners have no regrets after turning down Shark Tank investments, the marijuana market is luring Ohio entrepreneurs, ESPN ranks which college programs have the easiest route to the College Football Playoff, and Taco Bell is introducing Cap'n Crunch-rolled doughnut holes.

#KittenWeek campaign wins Best of Show at the ADDYs, the AKC releases its list of the nation's top dogs, Mills James is now fully employee-owned, Asian fast-casual chain is making its Ohio debut, briefs on Planet Fitness, Valvoline, AT&T and Otterbein, plus free beer at Cleveland Indians games, and the NFL commissioner thinks the Cleveland Browns owner is doing a heckuva job.

Another proposal to legalize marijuana has been sent back for more work, Ted Strickland comes out swinging in his challenge to Rob Portman, Jack Nicklaus launches a line of ice cream with Schwan's, Heinen's opens a supermarket in a historic building in Cleveland, and LeBron wants colleges to lay off LeBron James Jr.

Einstein Bros Bagels is closing some stores, Honda's plants in Ohio are getting back to normal, a golf course is being converted into a business park, and Ohio has more millionaires but we're still lagging the rest of the country.

Marijuana legalization group moves a proposed grow site to Delaware, the Delta Queen riverboat has been sold again, Cedar Point and Kings Island parent reports record revenue, the University of Akron is paying students to watch basketball, and the Cleveland Cavaliers are enjoying a huge boost in viewers.

Jamie Dimon gives career advice to the Ohio State Buckeyes, Ohio's pension funds have put billions into hedge funds but results have been underwhelming, East Coast writers take cheap shots at Columbus, and NASA has a Victoria's Secret veteran helping design its next-generation space suits.

West Virginia is getting a huge manufacturing plant that will employ 700, restaurants are a big component of Steiner & Associates' retail center north of Cincinnati and LeBron James is launching a fashion show.

Ohio State University officials are betting that lowering the price of tickets for two early-season non-conference games will help fill Ohio Stadium for what typically are blowouts – but not sellouts – and therefore have a neutral effect on overall ticket revenue.

Cardinal Health is no longer Ohio's largest public company, MAC schools are struggling to figure out how to pay for increased financial aid for student-athletes, the College Football Playoff is staying put on New Year's Eve, the BuckeyeThon dance marathon smashed its goal for supporting Nationwide Children's Hospital, and Pure Romance opens a pop-up store featuring Fifty Shades of Grey merchandise.